On Fri, 10 Dec 2004 17:05:18 +0100
rami wrote:

> Martin wrote:
> >
> >
> > If you're trying to make the connection as root, that's very likely
> > the problem.  The correct step in earlier versions of RedHat was to
> > disable remote login as root yourself, so it's possible Fedora has
> > done that for you.
> 
> Just a thought. Could be the ~.ssh/known_hosts file that already has
> an entry for a machine with the same IP address, but a different MAC
> address. Try deleting the corresponding line on the ~.ssh/known_hosts
> file of the *client*.

I guess not... Otherwise, the client would exit with a warning that
someone is possibly trying to spoof the IP you're attempting to connect
to. The OP would certainly tell us if he got such a message, now
wouldn't you, OP?

If I had to bet on this, my money would be on the no root login
option...

Cheers

-- 
Horror Vacui

Registered Linux user #257714

Go get yourself... counted: http://counter.li.org/
- and keep following the GNU.


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